Can Schools Preserve Their History, Even After State Takeover?

Kyle Stokes / StateImpact Indiana
A photo of the first ever basketball team for "Manual Training High School" hangs in what is now Emmerich Manual High School's alumni room. The team began play in the 1901-02 season, six years after the school first opened.
The five Indiana schools slated for takeover next year aren’t only notable for their low academic performance in the eyes of state education officials. These schools are also some of the state’s oldest.
Gary’s Roosevelt High School started as a one-room schoolhouse in 1908. In Indianapolis, T.C. Howe opened in 1938. The oldest school on the list, Emmerich Manual High School, opened in 1895.
At Manual in particular, alumni are going to particularly great lengths to ensure the school’s historic artifacts — including more than 60 valuable paintings and other class gifts — stay with the building even after the state takes over.
Politically heavy-hitting Manual alumni, including former state GOP chairman Gordon Durnil, have sent letters to the Indiana Board of Education, stating concerns that the district will remove the artifacts — something the district says it will not do with any physical property at Manual.
Still, the letters prompted state superintendent Tony Bennett to raise the possibility off cutting Indianapolis Public Schools’ state funding if the district obstructs the takeover team.
Kyle Stokes / StateImpact Indiana permalink
Sherry Slemons (right) and Alice Glover (left), both Manual High School alumni, prepare an historic Manual High School JROTC uniform for display in the alumni room's display window.


